Evaluation of the effect of chickenpox vaccination on shingles epidemiology using agent-based modeling
Authored by Nathaniel D Osgood, Alexander Doroshenko, Weicheng Qian, Ellen Rafferty, Wade McDonald
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.5012
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
AnyLogic
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://figshare.com/articles/Chickenpox_and_shingles_ABM/5294647/1
Abstract
Background: Biological interactions between varicella (chickenpox) and
herpes zoster (shingles), two diseases caused by the varicella zoster
virus (VZV), continue to be debated including the potential effect on
shingles cases following the introduction of universal childhood
chickenpox vaccination programs. We investigated how chickenpox
vaccination in Alberta impacts the incidence and age-distribution of
shingles over 75 years post-vaccination, taking into consideration a
variety of plausible theories of waning and boosting of immunity.
Methods: We developed an agent-based model representing VZV disease,
transmission, vaccination states and coverage, waning and boosting of
immunity in a stylized geographic area, utilizing a distance-based
network. We derived parameters from literature, including modeling,
epidemiological, and immunology studies. We calibrated our model to the
age-specific incidence of shingles and chickenpox prior to vaccination
to derive optimal combinations of duration of boosting (DoB) and waning
of immunity. We conducted paired simulations with and without
implementing chickenpox vaccination. We computed the count and
cumulative incidence rate of shingles cases at 10, 25, 50, and 75 years
intervals, following introduction of vaccination, and compared the
difference between runs with vaccination and without vaccination using
the Mann-Whitney U-test to determine statistical significance. We
carried out sensitivity analyses by increasing and lowering vaccination
coverage and removing biological effect of boosting.
Results: Chickenpox vaccination led to a decrease in chickenpox cases.
The cumulative incidence of chickenpox had dropped from 1,254 cases per
100,000 person-years pre chickenpox vaccination to 193 cases per 100,000
person-years 10 years after the vaccine implementation. We observed an
increase in the all-ages shingles cumulative incidence at 10 and 25
years post chickenpox vaccination and mixed cumulative incidence change
at 50 and 75 years post-vaccination. The magnitude of change was
sensitive to DoB and ranged from an increase of 22-100 per 100,000
person-years at 10 years post-vaccination for two and seven years of
boosting respectively (p < 0.001). At 75 years post-vaccination,
cumulative incidence ranged from a decline of 70 to an increase of 71
per 100,000 person-years for two and seven years of boosting
respectively (p < 0.001). Sensitivity analyses had a minimal impact on
our inferences except for removing the effect of boosting.
Discussion: Our model demonstrates that over the longer time period,
there will be a reduction in shingles incidence driven by the depletion
of the source of shingles reactivation; however in the short to medium
term some age cohorts may experience an increase in shingles incidence.
Our model offers a platform to further explore the relationship between
chickenpox and shingles, including analyzing the impact of different
chickenpox vaccination schedules and cost-effectiveness studies.
Tags
Agent-based modeling
Epidemiology
Infection
Health Policy
long-term
Vaccination
immunization
Impact
Canada
Hypothesis
Chickenpox
Contact
Shingles
Varicella-zoster-virus
Herpes-zoster
Force